Ossington: A Diverse Neighborhood

Once a lonely strip littered with long-dead storefronts Ossington has quickly become the ‘it’ destination of Toronto. Tucked between Dundas and Queen, it is a stretch of neighborhood art, fashion, food and drink. Finally with its wide selection of trendy bars, Ossington Avenue gives an opportunity for unforgettable night life any night of the week.

A maelstrom of current fashion trends, stylish bars, unique restaurants, gyms and yoga studios, art galleries, theater and local businesses, all among homeowners and residences, Ossington Avenue has proven itself to be one of the most vibrant areas in Toronto. Unrivaled with being the latest and greatest destination for drinking and dining, one can also shop for the most current fashion trends or rummage for that one-of-a-kind vintage piece or secondhand book. Encounter freshly baked goods, European meat shops, and a DIY wine making emporium.

If that isn’t enough, one can find Canada’s contemporary artists showing in the finest galleries. So come down to this vibrant area and pull up a bar stool with the locals at Sweaty Betty’s, Dakota Tavern or the Crooked Star. Try your pallet at Foxley or Delux or revel with the weekend crowd at LeVack Block, Reposado or The Ossington.

The Lomogon 2.5/32 Art Lens lets you widen your world – yet it isn’t any wide-angle lens. Designed to electrify escapades great and small, it’s your ticket to the definitive Lomography aesthetic. Sweet saturation, high contrast, cutting-edge optical quality, unique bokeh, super-speedy aperture mechanism – the Lomogon is the ultimate Lomo eye on the world. Head over to Kickstarter now to discover everything you need to know about our latest invention, and save up to 40% on its final retail price with our amazing Kickstarter specials!

More Interesting Articles

A new music video from the band Perdurabo & Shramm is shot with the LomoKino camera, using the Lomography Color Negative 400. Watch the film produced by Davide Arneodo and read our exclusive interview with the filmmaker here in the Magazine.

Julia Grandperret Motin is a self-taught photographer, dipping her toes into analogue photography when she was just 17 years old. Today, we find out more about her as well as her Lomogon Art Lens first impressions.

Jeff Tinard started photography around ten years ago. His black and white world leads us to encounter new faces and figures which the photographer has frozen in time. We lent him the Lomogon 2.5/32 Art Lens to try out. Read more about his thoughts on the lens in the interview below.

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